Walmart announced new policies for its massive suppliers
last week in order to improve safety at supplier factories. The new policies
are connected to a fire in Bangladesh last November, which killed more than 100
workers at a shoe factory.
The new policies aimed to ensure the safety and working
conditions of Walmart’s major suppliers. Walmart explicitly mentioned in its
new policies that Walmart doesn’t allow any supplier sub-contracting work to
other vendors without its knowledge.1
Large US and European retailers used to focus more on
producing cost and qualities when choosing their major suppliers, but care less
about safety and working conditions. They viewed that it’s more of the local
government’s responsibility to ensure the factory’s safety and working
condition. However, with more and more media exposure in recent years, some
“bloody factories” in China and Southeast Asia have gotten worldwide attention
in recent years. After Tim Cook’s visit to Foxconn last year, Apple promised to
improve salaries and working conditions in their suppliers, and so do other
retailer giants such as Walmart and Sears.
Some argue that more concerns about supplier may drive up
production costs and have negative economic impacts, while others maintain that
more control over their suppliers leads to more efficient supply chain system
for companies like Walmart and Apple, and thus actually drive the product price
down. It seems that supplier policies are way beyond just moral issues.
[1]. http://www.scdigest.com/ONTARGET/13-01-24-2.PHP?cid=6648&ctype=content
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